Watery Landscapes Set the Stage for Lachlan Turczans Ephemeral Light Installations
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Veil IV (2024), water, light, silt, 15 x 15 x 3 feet. All images Lachlan Turczan, shared with permissionWatery Landscapes Set the Stage for Lachlan Turczans Ephemeral Light InstallationsFebruary 14, 2025Kate MothesIn the dreamy installations of Lachlan Turczan, natural and perceptual phenomena combine in otherworldly installations merging technology with aquatic landscapes. Water is central to the Los Angeles-based artists work and helps shape an ongoing series of immersive projects incorporating light and sonic phenomena.Turczan is influenced by the Light and Space movement, which originated in Southern California in the 1960s and is characterized by the work of John McLaughlin, Robert Irwin, James Turrell, Lita Albuquerque, and more. The movement focused on perception, employing materials like glass, neon, resin, acrylic, and fluorescent lights to emphasize light, volume, and scale. Constellation Grid (2024), water, light, and fog. A swamp in Upstate New YorkMany Light and Space artists created installations and immersive spaces conditioned by naturally occurring elements like Turrells ever-changing glimpse of the sky through a ceiling aperture for Space that Sees. Not only does the view change as clouds roll by or the weather shifts, but the light continuously transforms the entire room.While my work shares this lineage, Turczan tells Colossal, it diverges in several key ways: rather than exploring the nature of experience, I create experiences of nature that challenge our understanding of light, water, and space. He describes his approach as complicating these elements, emphasizing the ever-changing fluidity of the environment.In Turczans ongoing Veil series, light installations unfold organically in locations ranging from Death Valleys Badwater Basin to a flooded park near the Rhine River. Lasers and beams of light are projected and submerged, capturing the movement of wind, mist, and the waters surface.Additional pieces also merge light and water, like Aldwa Alsael, which translates to liquid light, and was commissioned for the 2024 Noor Riyadh Light Art Festival.Veil I (2024), light, water, and salt. Death Valley, CaliforniaFor the most part, these installations unfold organically, Turczan says. I may discover a location in nature that seems perfect for a new Veil sculpture, but when I return, the conditions have inevitably changed. Evolving circumstances require the artist to proceed with an openness to chance encounters that strike a balance between preparation and intuition.Find more on Turczans website, and follow updates on Instagram. (via This Isnt Happiness)Death Valley Veil (2024), water, light, and haze. Lake Manly, a temporary lake that formed in Death Valleys Badwater Basin after Hurricane HillaryVeil II (2024), light, water, and steam. Mojave Desert, CaliforniaAldwa Alsael (2024), water, light, and steel tower, 25 x 25 x 50 feetVeil V (2024), water and light, 15 x 15 x 3 feetAldwa AlsaelNext article
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